In the horror of witnessing so many classmates perish before his eyes in a violent train wreck, Teru discovers two survivors in the tunnel: Ako and Nobuo. But salvation from this bloody carnage is far from their grasp. As they try to dig out from the wreck in order to come up with a plan to stay alive, the lack of light and food, combined with the stench of death and decay, will lead one member of the group down a dark and demented path. And with sudden, violent earthquakes shaking the tunnel, escaping to the outside world may lead them to an even greater danger.

I dunno. I feel kind of meh after reading it, but I feel like I should have liked it more than I did.

The ending really breaks down into 'wtf-I-don't-care' territory, where you have a whole bunch of nutters trying to expound on philosophy with wordswordswords and none of it has any relevance to anything. There's no conclusion.

Lots of it were too dark for its own good. There's just too much insanity. Yes, people in stressful situations can take some crazy actions, and yes, I suppose strange cults could spring up ... but seriously now. There's a limit to the number of wackoes that my suspension of disbelief can take.

It's worse in retrospect than it was to read. If you like apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic then I recommend it. I enjoyed reading large chunks of it, but as a whole package it doesn't really fit together.

For some this may be awesome. However instead of post-apocalyptic, it seemed that throughout the manga it was just a nonstop apocalypse. Horrible things never stopped happening, and...meh...I don't know, I personally didn't like it, I see how others might.

Happy-happy:You'll probably only like this for the first volume, skip the second volume or so, and then go straight for the last volume. Case in point: It's a waste of your time.Dark:You'll also not like this book from beginning to end, unless you're into the psychological spin inside of it (and it doesn't get too deep into it as some of the more readily available philosophy books out there, yet it is still thought provoking). Gore-wise... it doesn't have as much gore as you might expect from series about hordes of Japanese civilians going crazy from lack of light, order, and internet. Once you have exhausted other series like (the first few volumes of) Death Note, then you can come back over here to this manga to vent your frustration.Normal (and I mean, those who at that particular moment, just choose to lay back and enjoy a partly dark psychological manga):It's nice, and the characters don't get attached to you that much, so you can enjoy a peaceful night's sleep knowing that even if all of them die, you won't even flinch (hopefully). That's a lie by the way, since they actually do stay with you, just not too much that you'd be a fan of a group of senile juniors and wise old folks. It's a blast to read from the get-go, so don't try to read a volume per night since it wont scare you at all (that much).

Also, just like the other users have pointed out, there is good plot, development, and among other things, love (or lust, or whatever you would call two borderline high schoolers, alone, by themselves, and no other girls/guys left to consider).

The first few chapters after the train wreck are pretty damn good,Then the series takes a nose dive and tries to push philosophical bullshit onto the readers that usually doesn't make any sense.The whole manga is just nothing happening,There's no story or character arks,The main characters survive nigh IMPOSSIBLE situations numerous times and the whole manga builds up to an ending that doesn't explain anything and is just absolutely awful.This is one of the worst written mangas I have ever read and I would have dropped it 10 chapters in if it wasn't for me wanting to find out what the cause of the disaster was,Instead I was treated with a dick up my ass and a huge middle finger for the time I put into the manga

Quite simply it is one of the best survival manga I have read in a long time. From the pacing, art tot the characters everything is just right. Even the emotions can be felt as the protags are trying to survive. I'm don't entirely agree with what jooles has said because Fujisawa Yuki's bio-meat was more along the lines of monster horror. Sure, metro survive was more realistic but there is only so much that can be done in 2 volumes. Overall, this is much better than what jooles has said and it will grab you from the first page to the end. The only thing which annoyed me was the religious plot which didn't go anywhere. But I actually read the entire series in one day (ofc with a few gaps in between)!!! You won't regret reading this series. You should have read it atleast ONCE.

And it's not entirely bad.Like mentioned before, the art is different and it fits the manga's mood perfectly. It's hard to say whether it's realistic or not because it's so unimaginable for me, but the storyline is believable.Dragon Head isn't really a light reading. It's very psychological (disturbing) and engaging. And I'd definitely recommend it.

I can't believe nobody mentioned the classic novel "Lord of the Flies". The manga and the novel are very similar in themes that it makes me think the manga is a ripoff. Well, i loved the novel, and i love the manga. I'm just sick of endings leaving you unsatisfied.

The first part of the manga was quite good, because of the survival element, but after that it was just boring, its lose all the survival element. While the character looks like want to live, their action sometimes show otherwise, they literary go to the center of the disaster just because one guy said so, and for some reason the rest follow. Not only they remove the survival they also added philosophy crap or what not, which raise another point if they can talk good about philosophy why all the character is so stupid by 20-30 chapter it was clear what is the cause yet it need another 50 chapter before anyone realize, and if you think thing would go better you guess wrong, it was a chore to read it until the end not only that the author also fail to gives satisfying ending.

The story are not the only thing that is wrong, in manga usually author will only draw some part let the reader brain make their character move, in Dragon Head the author literary draw frame by frame, making it the slowest fighting scene ever it feel like the entire thing run on slow motion.

I still don't understand why there's so many high rating for this manga, reading it was a chore, and the worse off all is my chore was not rewarded with proper ending.

I disagree with some of the comments made about this book, especially the comment where people thought the plots were given away too early; you can't attract readers if your point in the manga is dragged on. My point: I loved the beginning; I love the terror, the insanity, survival mode. I love how the darkness was portrayed in this manga.

Art-wise, I'm a little dissatisfied. But the background of every panel is beautiful, even when it was in disaster. All the characters are...bland. They seem boring; their personality is predictable. We know who was gonna be the bad person, the caring person, the reasonable person, so forth. While reading this manga, a lot of things came to my mind; what kind of disastrous event is this? It kept me questioning, and the only way to find out was to keep reading.

After awhile, it became apparent as to what was causing all this horrific event. I loved the moral of this story. The ending, however, is extremely painful for me to read; to accept the fact that after all the violence, the natural disasters, the anxious moments of being reunited...and the ending was kind of like, "WTF. You gotta be kidding. THIS IS IT" I gave it a blah rating because of the blah ending. And I would recommend it if it was better, but why recommend it when you're gonna be dissatisfied and unpleased at the end?